Facebook Credits went into its alpha stage in May 2009 and progressed into the beta stage in February 2010,[6] which ended in January 2011.[7] At that time, Facebook announced all Facebook game developers would be required to process payments only through Facebook Credits from July 1, 2011.[8]

In September 2010, it was announced that Facebook Credits would become the exclusive payment method for all games developed by Zynga and hosted on Facebook.[15][16] Zynga is the number one Facebook application developer and was expected to earn $500 million in 2010 from virtual goods.[3]


How To Get Facebook Credits From Game Coins


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U.S. District Court Judge Beth Freeman ordered the documents unsealed on Jan. 14 after Reveal from The Center for Investigative Reporting intervened last year, arguing the public had a right to know how Facebook targeted children. The judge gave Facebook until Jan. 24 to unseal the documents, although she allowed the company to keep a few of the records sealed or partially redacted. The documents span a time period of 2010 to 2014.

A couple of months earlier, she had launched a project to help Facebook reduce chargebacks from the credit card companies, who were forcing the social media giant to return money spent by children on games after hearing from outraged parents who said they were duped.

So despite their monthslong efforts, and results showing they could reduce the problem, and the fact that tech companies such as Apple were already using some similar form of authorization, Facebook decided to go in another direction. It would not try to block children from unwittingly spending hundreds or even thousands of dollars on its games.

Rather than trying to stop children from making costly mistakes, the document stated that developers should just give free virtual items to users who complain, things such as flaming swords, extra lives and other in-game enhancements.

At the time the document was written, Facebook was waiting to see if it would win enough chargeback disputes to make it worth automating the process. It is unclear from the documents if Facebook won enough disputes and went ahead with its plan.

But Facebook successfully fought to get most of the records in the case sealed, saying public access to the documents would hurt its business. So the trove of behind-the-scenes strategies and messages that Parker and his team had uncovered remained hidden from public view, until Reveal intervened in the case last year.

As of 2014, Children and their parents were still clawing back money from Facebook at extremely high rates. About 9 percent of the revenue Facebook made off kids was eventually charged back by the credit card companies as recently as March 2014. That is nearly identical to the extraordinary rates Facebook first noticed more than three years earlier. In effect, the company had done nothing to change it.

You also won't receive a text from the settlement administrator, a court-appointed Philadelphia company called the Angeion Group, nor will you be asked to text its representatives. If you receive such texts, it's most likely an attempt to defraud you.

Nevertheless, the concept of money spread. In 995, paper money was introduced in Sichuan, China, when a merchant in Chengdu gave people fancy receipts in exchange for their iron coins. Paper bills spared people the physical burden of their wealth, which helped facilitate trade over longer distances.

As it evolved, money became increasingly symbolic. Early paper money acted as an IOU and could always be exchanged for metallic coins of various values. In the late 13th century, however, the Mongol emperor Kublai Khan invented paper money that was not backed by anything. It was money because the emperor said it was money. People agreed. In the intervening centuries, money has conjured more fantastic leaps of faith with the invention of the stock market, centralized banking and, recently, cryptocurrencies.

Those who live by their labor suffer from this imbalance. If I go to the market to sell a bushel of cucumbers when the cost of food is falling, a shopper may not buy them, preferring to buy them next week at a lower price. My cucumbers will not last the week, so I am forced to drop my price. A deflationary spiral may ensue.

The faults of money go further, Gesell wrote. When small businesses take out loans from banks, they must pay the banks interest on those loans, which means they must raise prices or cut wages. Thus, interest is a private gain at a public cost. In practice, those with money grow richer and those without grow poorer. Our economy is full of examples of this, where those with money make more ($100,000 minimum investments in high-yield hedge funds, for example) and those without pay higher costs (like high-interest predatory lending).

The mine owner then gathered the unemployed miners and asked if they would go back to work, not for legal tender, but for this new currency. They agreed that any money was better than no money. The mine owner purchased food, clothing and household goods from warehouses that were already using the Wra currency. The miners, now back digging coal, used their wages to buy these goods from the mine owner. Soon, other businesses in town wanted to use the currency to benefit from the sudden influx of cash. Because the currency depreciated at 1% per month, everyone was eager to part with it and it circulated rapidly throughout the economy. Soon, in whole districts, the Wra currency replaced the Reichsmark, which alarmed the bigger banks and the government. Finally, the Reichsbank ended the experiment by banning the currency.

The mayor hired townspeople, paid in Work Certificates, to improve roads, install streetlights and build a concrete bridge. Work Certificates circulated rapidly from merchants to tenants, to landlords, to saving accounts. People paid their taxes early to avoid paying for stamps. In one year, the Work Certificates traded hands 463 times, creating goods and services worth almost 15 million schillings. By contrast, the ordinary schilling was exchanged only 21 times.

This apparently happens under certain games that are played on facebook but the company does not make it clear that when you buy credits/coins once you area apparently allowing them to set up an agreement for them to take a recurring fees. They do not send clients e-mails every time a payment goes out of your paypal account and paypal didn't send me an e-mail either, which is part of paypal's service to their customers. So I ask why I did not receive an e-mail stating payments were going out, even if on a recurring basis, as I would have stopped this much earlier.

I have just found this out when my son played a game but I have only authorised one payment, not recurring payments. I have now deleted this from my paypal account - hopefully, as some people are still having money taken out of their account even though they have deleted this.

Hi, I'd better ad that after an email from Paypal informing me a transaction of 160 was completed, I was alarmed to find it down to Facebook Ireland. Nobody, in my house, has access to my PC, I have never played any games or clicked on any ads. I hardly bother to even look at Facebook, yet still this happened. I agree it's deceit & should be stopped immediately by Paypal, who have told me to contact Facebook Ireland Ltd.

I to have been scammed by Facebook intl ltd but I have never clicked any link on FB as I hardly use it. My question is how can papyal allow this to happen with no authorisation from myself & hw did they access my account with paypal???

I am a Paypal user in Singapore and I have always been a fan of Paypal, i.e. I feel secure to buy from online shops which offer Paypal payment option. When I accessed my email this morning, I was shocked to see 12 emails (4 sets X 3 emails) from Paypal, arrived between 6:56am to 7:09am my time:


6:56am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $1.00 USD)

6:57am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $100.00 USD)

6:57am Your Billing Agreement with Facebook Payments Intl ltd has been cancelled


6:59am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $1.00 USD)

6:59am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $100.00 USD)

7:00am Your Billing Agreement with Facebook Payments Intl ltd has been cancelled


7:04am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $1.00 USD)

7:05am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $100.00 USD)

7:05am Your Billing Agreement with Facebook Payments Intl ltd has been cancelled


7:08am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $1.00 USD)

7:09am Receipt for Your Payment to Facebook Payments Intl ltd (a payment of $100.00 USD)

7:09am Your Billing Agreement with Facebook Payments Intl ltd has been cancelled


The email ids of this "seller" (Facebook Payments Payments Intl ltd) contain omething like Paypal-fbcredits-ireland1, -ireland2, -ireland3, etc


I have never played any Facebook game nor bought any Facebook credits. In fact, I am hardly a Facebook user - the last time I logged on to Facebook was more than 2 years ago. I have never pre-approved any billing agreement with "Facebook Payments Intl ltd" to deduct from my Paypal account. I have already logged the above payments ($404.00 USD in total) as unauthorized transactions with Paypal resolution center.


I did a search in the Internet and found this forum. After reading the experiences of others in this forum and from other forums, I have lost confidence with Paypal, because this kind of Paypal-Facebook complaints are not rare!


I consider myself as one who stays very alert against scam emails. I would be very puzzled if I have fallen into a trap that stole my Paypal userid and password. I have not clicked on anything to do with Facebook or Facebook credits lately. Nobody (children or adults) except myself uses my PC or my mobile phone


Given the number of similar complaints, I can't help but to think that there is some loophole between Paypal's "My pre-approved payments" feature linked to Facebook Payments Intl ltd. Some crooks have discovered that loophole and capitalized on it.


From the "pattern" of the above transactions, they looks as if they were done by some automated program. From the "pattern", it seems that when a "pre-approved payments" was set up, it did not trigger any email notification, while a cancellation of the pre-approved payments triggered an email notification. And yet after the cancellation of the "billing agreement", the next set of payments went through. ( What is wrong here?)


I hope Paypal investigate thoroughly and swiftly patching up the loophole, if any. I look forward to an explanation from Paypal that will restore my confidence to maintain my Paypal account. be457b7860

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